Institutionalized Persons

The ACLU of Illinois believes that persons in government institutions or for whom the government is responsible deserve a fair and constitutionally appropriate level of care.

Purple filtered hands holding each other up. Red filtered clipboard over purple geometric shape.

The ACLU of Illinois believes that persons in government institutions or for whom the government is responsible deserve a fair and constitutionally appropriate level of care. We work to ensure that the State of Illinois meets this standard when providing health care, mental health services, home care services for disabled people and protection for children in the child welfare system. Our advocacy efforts in this field are varied, from winning the end of solitary confinement for those in the Department of Juvenile Justice, to working on moving individuals with disabilities out of institutions and into community based homes. These are long term efforts that require expertise and persistence.

The Latest

News & Commentary
White text Franklin County Juvenile Detention Center. Behind navy filtered image of the front of the building.

Put on Notice

Early 2024, the Franklin County Juvenile Detention Center closed it's doors. Alexis Picard, Legal Fellow at the ACLU of Illinois, sat down to discuss the case and the most recent developments. 
News & Commentary
Nora in front of Springfield Capitol Ceiling

Testimony Regarding Proposals to Advance Safety for DCFS Workers

There are many actions DCFS can take to better protect its workers and needs to put in place safety measures that caseworkers and investigators have been asking for.
Press Release
Placeholder image

ACLU of Illinois Responds to DCFS’ Efforts to Avoid Accountability Under Federal Consent Decree

Know Your Rights
Know Your Rights - Reproductive Rights While Incarcerated

Know Your Rights - Reproductive Rights While Incarcerated

Court Case
Jan 10, 2026

Hicks v. Illinois Department of Corrections

We represent Amy Hicks, a woman from downstate Illinois who was forced to undergo the non-consensual induction of her labor during the birth of her third child while she was in the custody of the Illinois Department of Corrections at the Logan Correctional Center in Lincoln, Illinois. This experience violated Ms. Hicks’ rights under the Illinois Reproductive Health Act, a law that explicitly allows every person in our state to make their own autonomous decisions about their reproductive health care, and the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which protects the right of individuals to refuse unwanted medical care. Ms. Hicks was well along in her third trimester of pregnancy when she entered Logan Correctional Center in January of 2024. Almost from the moment she got to Logan, Ms. Hicks was told by one prison staffer and medical provider after another that she would be scheduled for an induction of her labor prior to her due date. Ms. Hicks repeatedly made clear to medical professionals and IDOC staff that she did not want to be induced and wished to go into labor naturally, just as she had done with her first two children. All of these people ignored her wishes and told her that she would be scheduled for an induction because this was the protocol for all pregnant inmates, regardless of what she wanted. In early February, two full weeks ahead of her due date, Ms. Hicks was taken (in shackles) to a hospital where the induction was performed. This experience of having her express wishes regarding her medical care disregarded was extremely upsetting and traumatizing for Ms. Hicks. We are asking a federal court to recognize that Ms. Hicks’ treatment while in custody of the Illinois Department of Corrections violated her rights under federal and state law and ensure that she is compensated for her suffering. We hope this case prompts changes so that the right of all incarcerated individuals to make their own decisions about how they will give birth will be respected going forward.
Court Case
Dec 04, 2025

Brown v. Little

Court Case
Jun 11, 2024

J.B.H. v. Knox County

Court Case
Jul 05, 2023

Maurer v. Franklin County